Josef von Sternberg

Josef von Sternberg
Born Jonas Sternberg
29 May 1894
Vienna, Austria-Hungary
Died 22 December 1969 (aged 75)
Hollywood, California
Spouse(s) Riza Royce (1926-1930; divorced)
Jean Annette McBride (1945-1947; divorced)
Meri Otis Wilner (1948-1969; his death; 1 child)
Parent(s) Moses (Morris) Sternberg

Josef von Sternberg, born Jonas Sternberg (29 May 1894 22 December 1969) was an Austrian-American film director. His family emigrated permanently to the United States when he was fourteen, and he grew up in New York City. He started working at World Film Company in Fort Lee, New Jersey, where he was mentored by French director Emile Chautard.

Sternberg started in Hollywood after making his first film as a director in 1925. Charlie Chaplin became interested in him, and had him direct a film. Von Sternberg worked on late silent films in the late 1920s, by which time he had adopted the use of "von" in his name. After working with the award-winning German star Emil Jannings, he was invited from Hollywood to Berlin in 1930 to make one of Europe's first talkies, Der blaue Engel (The Blue Angel) with Jannings and an unknown revue-artist, Marlene Dietrich. His flattering soft-focus technique and encouragement of her performances helped to create the Dietrich legend in the six films they made together in Hollywood.

Biography

Early life and education

Josef von Sternberg was born Jonas Sternberg in 1894 to a Jewish family in Vienna. When he was two years old, his father Moses (Morris) Sternberg, a former soldier in the army of Austria-Hungary, moved to the United States in search of work. The rest of the family emigrated and rejoined his father when Jonas was seven. Three years later, the entire family returned to Vienna. After Sternberg had turned fourteen, the family emigrated again to the United States (US), settling in New York City. His father found work there as a lace worker, but they struggled to survive. Sternberg learned English in public schools in New York, which were filled with immigrants.

Early career

Sternberg dropped out of Jamaica High School and worked as an errand boy in a lace warehouse. He later obtained a job cleaning and repairing movie prints. By about 1915 he was working for William A. Brady at the World Film Company at Fort Lee, New Jersey. There he was mentored by Emile Chautard and other French-speaking directors and cinematographers at World. Chautard hired Sternberg as an assistant director in 1919 for a version of The Mystery of the Yellow Room. Sternberg made his directorial debut in 1925 with The Salvation Hunters, considered by some historians to be the first American independent film.

Actor/co-producer Elliott Dexter added the false aristocratic title 'von' to Sternberg's name in 1925 during the production of By Divine Right, supposedly to "even up" the credits as they appeared on screen. Sternberg did not protest, as he liked the suggestion of comparison with director Erich von Stroheim, whom he greatly admired.)

Charlie Chaplin was impressed by The Salvation Hunters, and encouraged Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford to acquire the rights to it. Pickford asked Sternberg to direct a film with her as star, but rejected his first scenario. Chaplin commissioned him to write and direct A Woman of the Sea (also known as The Sea Gull), starring his former star and lover Edna Purviance, but later destroyed the film. Still photographs from A Woman of the Sea were published by Purviance's family in 2008.

Von Sternberg had commercial success later in the decade at Paramount Pictures with the late-period silent films The Last Command and The Docks of New York (both 1928). These were both noted for their influential cinematography. His reputation was also advanced by a series of early gangster films including Underworld (1927) and Thunderbolt (1929).

Dietrich

Marlene Dietrich in Shanghai Express
In this famous publicity still, Sternberg used butterfly lighting to enhance Dietrich's features.[1]
(Paramount 1932, photo by Don English)

Von Sternberg's career suffered a decline after Thunderbolt and he accepted an invitation to make a film in Germany. In 1929, Sternberg worked in Berlin, where he directed Der blaue Engel (The Blue Angel; 1930) in both German and English versions simultaneously. This became widely acclaimed. It was Sternberg's second film with the German actor Emil Jannings, who played the doomed Professor Rath. (The first was The Last Command.)

Von Sternberg cast the then little-known Marlene Dietrich as Lola Lola, the female lead; due to her performance, she became an international star overnight. He then invited her to the US, welcoming her with gifts including a green Rolls-Royce Phantom II. The car later appeared in their first US film Morocco. [2] Sternberg and Dietrich later continued to collaborate in the United States on six notable films: Morocco (1930), Dishonored (1931), Shanghai Express (1932), Blonde Venus (1932), The Scarlet Empress (1934), and The Devil is a Woman (1935). The Scarlet Empress is particularly celebrated for its atmospheric and suggestively demonic production design.

In 1932, von Sternberg commissioned architect Richard Neutra to design the 'Von Sternberg House', an avant-garde American modernist residence. Ayn Rand later bought it and lived in it. The house was eventually demolished in 1972 after another owner wanted to redevelop the lot.

Von Sternberg contributed to the glamorous image of stars such as Dietrich, Carole Lombard, Rita Hayworth and Dolores del Rio, helping to create and define this concept in Hollywood.[3]

Later career

Macao (1952) was von Sternberg's last Hollywood film. His Anatahan (1953) was made in Japan. It is the story of a group of Japanese soldiers who refused to believe that the Second World War had ended. Von Sternberg wrote, narrated, photographed and directed the film. His last work, it had limited release and was a financial failure.

He had co-directed Jet Pilot (1957) in Hollywood when still under contract to producer Howard Hughes.[4] It was released seven years after he completed it.

Between 1959 and 1963, von Sternberg taught a course on film aesthetics at the University of California at Los Angeles, based on his own works. His students included Jim Morrison and Ray Manzarek, who went on to form the rock group The Doors. The group recorded songs referring to Sternberg. Manzarek describes Sternberg as "perhaps the greatest single influence on The Doors."[5](Note: cite needs publisher, date and page)

Von Sternberg wrote an autobiography, Fun in a Chinese Laundry (1965); the title was drawn from an early film comedy. He died in 1969 from a heart attack, at age 75. He was interred in the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Westwood, California near several film studios.

Filmography

Silent films

Sound films

Documentaries

Other projects

Bibliography

References

  1. "Marlene Dietrich in Shanghai Express by Don English (Paramount, 1932)". Auction Results Archives. Heritage Capital Corporation. Retrieved 5 January 2013. With direction and lighting by genius Josef von Sternberg, photographer Don English took what would become the most iconic image of Marlene Dietrich.
  2. "THE EX-MARLENE DIETRICH, MULTIPLE BEST IN SHOW WINNING 1930 Rolls-Royce Phantom". Bonhams.
  3. Buena suerte viviendo: Dolores del Río
  4. The Saga of Anatahan (1953): Joseph von Sternberg, Online Film Critics Society, at Rotten Tomatoes
  5. The Doors and Ben-Fong Torres, The Doors

Sources

External links